PBNB
Well-known member
I came across this link the other day and I am trying to figure out where this car fits in the market.
https://karmavancouver.com/revero/
Seems to have similar electric range to our older i3's of about 50 miles but has a bigger gas tank so you can go 300 miles total. Has a 21kW battery as well.
They are selling it with idea that if you drive less than 50 miles between charges you will use next to no gas.
It sort of looks like a Maserati and I am sure it is priced similar
I don't know if it can go head to head with a fancy loaded Tesla mainly due to the range differences.
I like the solar panels on the roof. They are really trying to make something different. If only the solar cells could harness the power from the sun with enough efficiency to make the panels charge the battery quickly. If a solar panel could even provide a 1 or 2 kW/h charge, that could work. Sort of gives us a glimpse into the future potential. The older (3 years) panels that I have for my trailer produce 9 amps per hour at 12 volts. I should try it to see if the panels can keep up with my 110 volt charger. There is an inverter and some extra trailer batteries in the mix but it would interesting to see. I never thought of the i3 as a tow vehicle but this could change everything! (sorry about going off on a tangent) .
The size of the i3 roof (non-sunroof) makes it a good candidate for a solar array. If the solar panel producers could make a panel efficient enough to charge the car, that would be a best seller.
https://karmavancouver.com/revero/
Seems to have similar electric range to our older i3's of about 50 miles but has a bigger gas tank so you can go 300 miles total. Has a 21kW battery as well.
They are selling it with idea that if you drive less than 50 miles between charges you will use next to no gas.
It sort of looks like a Maserati and I am sure it is priced similar
I like the solar panels on the roof. They are really trying to make something different. If only the solar cells could harness the power from the sun with enough efficiency to make the panels charge the battery quickly. If a solar panel could even provide a 1 or 2 kW/h charge, that could work. Sort of gives us a glimpse into the future potential. The older (3 years) panels that I have for my trailer produce 9 amps per hour at 12 volts. I should try it to see if the panels can keep up with my 110 volt charger. There is an inverter and some extra trailer batteries in the mix but it would interesting to see. I never thought of the i3 as a tow vehicle but this could change everything! (sorry about going off on a tangent) .
The size of the i3 roof (non-sunroof) makes it a good candidate for a solar array. If the solar panel producers could make a panel efficient enough to charge the car, that would be a best seller.